The news that Lehman Brothers had entered administration on 15 September 2008 sent the City into meltdown and took thousands of IT jobs with it.

The event may not have been the catalyst for the collapse of the global financial system, but it was the moment people realised the system was broke. The credit crunch had already caused problems for US mortgage lenders Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which had been bailed out by the US government a week earlier.

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PJ Di Giammarino, CEO at financial services think-tank JWG-IT, told Computer Weekly a year ago that IT workers would be hit hard by the financial turmoil. "In Europe we estimate that there are hundreds of thousands of IT workers in the financial services sector. But there are a bigger number of people affected by consolidation because it affects all the suppliers to the industry."

TowerGroup figures show that IT spending by European investment banks will fall 9% in 2009, compared with 2008. In the US, spending is predicted to drop 15%.

According to Bob McDowall, analyst at TowerGroup, as many as 300,000 people could have lost their jobs in the financial services sector globally by the end of 2009, with as many as 25% of that total drawn from IT professionals.

Japan-based investment bank Nomura, which bought part of Lehman Brothers said it would cut 1,000 jobs in London as a result of the integration of the companies.

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